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has again and again run back, mastered by a Heimweh which saved him.
Sometimes, in terrible trouble, once at the point of death, he went back, and
every time the touch of the earth renewed him, body and soul. Signs of this
saving Heimweh he sees here and there among those who remain at the
banquet, actually starving in satiety, some of them; and from the quiet valley
where his genius, long since the consecrated champion of the ancient
peasantry, does its best work, he calls upon these to come back and make
possible a new. His loyal traditionalism does not hinder his belief that a new
peasantry, not born, but becoming such from a choice inspired by heart’s
hunger and a surfeit of civilisation, must have a strong redemptive value of its
own among the decadent nations.
Of the earth he writes as he wrote of the stern tender woman who bore him
in the Forest Farm,—with a worship that makes a town-bred creature drag at
his chain or break his heart to run home to her. She has never failed him, he
says, in any need of spirit or flesh, nor will she ever fail her prodigals. When
they come back in a hundred or a thousand years they will find her patiently
waiting to teach them all the vital forgotten things over again: and, even if she
take the gewgaws and lumber out of their hands, she will leave them whatever
of learning she can with her ancient processes and gift of wonder transmute
into wisdom.
M. E. K.
The Forest Farm
Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Titel
- The Forest Farm
- Untertitel
- Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Autor
- Peter Rosegger
- Verlag
- The Vineyard Press
- Ort
- London
- Datum
- 1912
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 169
- Kategorien
- Geographie, Land und Leute
- International